Steele v. State
Steele v. State
Opinion of the Court
Had the Court of Common Pleas jurisdiction of this writ of error, is the question in this case.
However plain and simple words may be, they must always be taken in connection with the subject matter to which they relate. A Court of Common Pleas for each of the counties of Hartford and New Haven was established by an act passed in 1869. The court had exclusive original jurisdiction of certain matters in law and in equity, specified and pointed out in the third and fourth sections of the act. The jurisdiotion conferred was over civil causes only ; and the third section of the act closes thus : “but said court shall have no jurisdiction over criminal causes, nor over appeals from probate, .or petitions for divorce.” The fifth section of the act gives appellate jurisdiction from all judgments of justices of the peace from which an appeal was then allowed by law, except in criminal causes ; the ^pysaPto be taken exclusively to the next term of the court tobe held/in the county wherein the judgment appealed from was rJSfeed. At 'the close of the fifth section is this clause: — “ Wnfe-of error from judgments of justices of the peace shall also be brought exclusively to the said court at the next term thereof, in the county in which such judgment was rendered.”
We think it very clear that under this act the' Court of Common Pleas had no jurisdiction of a writ of error in a criminal case. In the first place, no criminal jurisdiction is conferred upon the court in this act; jurisdiction over that subject must be left, therefore, to the court or courts to'which the law had already committed it, for no court can be ousted of its jurisdiction by implication. In the next place, jurisdiction over criminal causes was expressly excluded in the
We have thus far considered this case under the provisions oí the act of 1869, which created the Courts of Common Pleas for Hartford and New Haven counties. The plaintiff relies on the first section of the act of 1870, which we have already quoted. The only substantial difference between this section of that act, and that of the previous year upon the same subject, is in regard to the time within which the writ of error must be brought. By the original act, it must be brought to the next term of the court in the county where the judgment was rendered; by the act of 1870, it may be brought at any time within three years after the rendering of the judgment.. At the same session of the General Assembly a Court of Common Pleas was created for each of the counties of New London and Fairfield, clothed with the same powers as were bestowed upon that court for the counties of Hartford and New Haven. All criminal jurisdiction wras expressly excluded from both these courts. In 1871, criminal jurisdiction was given to the court in New London county, but it was taken away in 1872.
We think that the Court of Common Pleas liad no jurisdiction of this writ of error. The original act, creating the court, not only omitted to confer any criminal jurisdiction, but positively excluded its exercise. The act of 1870 conferred no new powers, no additional jurisdiction, but simply extended the time for bringing writs of error to three years; probably to make our law symmetrical on that subject. The term “ exclusively,” on which stress is laid by the plaintiff’s counsel, as used in the act of 1869, may very properly be held
Certain other questions made we will not consider. The question of jurisdiction is decisive.
There is no error in the judgment complained of.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Frank Steele v. State
- Status
- Published